November 27, 2022
1 min read

India now has 2nd largest gamer base in world

India now makes up 50.2 per cent of all gamers in the top 10 Asian countries’ list…reports Asian Lite News

India now has the second largest gamer base in the world with 396.4 million gamers, a new report has showed.

India now makes up 50.2 per cent of all gamers in the top 10 Asian countries’ list, according to the data provided by market research firm Niko Partners.

“India is also the fastest growing market with a 5-year growth rate of 21 per cent for revenue,” mentioned the report titled ‘The Asia-10 Games Market’.

Niko Partners projects the Asia-10 PC and mobile game market will generate $35.9 billion in 2022, reaching $41.4 billion in 2026.

“Gamers are increasing at a much faster rate than revenue. Niko Partners projects the Asia-10 PC and mobile gamers will total 788.7 million in 2022, reaching 1.06 billion in 2026,” the report said.

India, Thailand, and the Philippines are the fastest growing markets for games revenue and number of gamers.

Japan and Korea are the most mature markets in the Asia-10 region, accounting for over 77 per cent of revenue, said the report.

ALSO READ: Pilot shortage in India?

Previous Story

Global Indian diaspora stages protest over 26/11 attacks

Next Story

IPL 2022 final enters Guinness World Record

Latest from -Top News

Iran Ready for ‘All-Out’ Saudi Cooperation

Saudi Defence Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman visited Tehran and engaged in crucial meetings with top Iranian officials, including President Masoud Pezeshkian and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. In a significant step

Trump confident of trade deal with EU

Meloni is the first European leader to visit Washington since Trump imposed, then paused, 20% tariffs on imports from the bloc Donald Trump and Giorgia Meloni talked up the chances of a
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Raj Neervannan-cofounded AlphaSense keen on India

Headquartered in New York City, AlphaSense employs over 1,000 people

RBI’s Vision for Global South Wins Industry Praise

The Central Bank has kept interest rates unchanged, balancing economic